The right answer is:
D: Speaker 4
In principle, it is right to desegregate pulic schools – but it may be dangerous to force that policy on a public that is not yet ready for it.
Explanation:
By 1957, most black children in the South were still forced to attend substandard schools. Orval Faubus was the governor of Arkansas, a moderate by southern standards. The black community had supported him in the past but in his last election he had faced tough opposition, he knew if he wanted to be reelected he needed the segregationist's vote.
The night before the school opened Faubus decided to resist integration. Units from the National Guard were mobilized with the mission to maintian and restore order according to the governor.
The resistance claimed that all the people of the south were in favor of segregation and Supreme Court or no Supreme Court were going to maintain segregated schools down in Dixie.
President Eisenhower sent in paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division claiming "mob rule can not be allowed to override the decisions of our courts, we are now in an occupied territory"
Each of the 8 black students attending Little Rock Central High School were assigned a soldier to walk them from class to class, but they were vulnerable in bathrooms and other isolated places.